From mindbodygreen.com
Sleep problems are one of the most common complaints during the menopause transition, affects up to 60% of perimenopausal and postmenopausal women. Night sweats or hot flashes often get the blame for disrupting sleep, but the real issue may be what happens after a woman wakes up (aka the stress, the racing thoughts, the desperate effort to fall back asleep). Over time, these patterns can amount to insomnia.
A new pilot trial tested whether a form of cognitive behavioural therapy designed specifically for menopause could break this cycle and help midlife women sleep better without medication.
Researchers tested a therapy that targets both insomnia and hot flashes
Cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is already considered a go-to treatment for chronic sleep problems by the American College of Physicians. But standard CBT-I wasn't built with menopause in mind. This trial adapted the approach specifically for midlife women dealing with both insomnia and nightly hot flashes.
Researchers enrolled 43 perimenopausal and postmenopausal women who had been diagnosed with insomnia and reported at least one hot flash per night. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either the menopause-adapted therapy (four 50-minute sessions over eight weeks) or a single menopause education session.
The therapy combined standard CBT-I techniques (like limiting time in bed, only using the bed for sleep, and reframing unhelpful thoughts about sleep) with strategies designed specifically for hot flashes, including slow breathing exercises and techniques for changing how women react to night-time symptoms.
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CBT-MI improved sleep
Women who received CBT-MI showed significantly greater improvements in sleep than those who received menopause education alone.
Insomnia severity scores dropped more in the CBT-MI group immediately after treatment (about a 10-point reduction vs. 6 points in the control group), and improvements were maintained at the 1-month follow-up.
The CBT group also reported less disruption from night sweats and higher sleep self-efficacy, meaning greater confidence in their ability to sleep despite symptoms.
Some sleep benefits, particularly night-time symptoms, were still present at 3 months, suggesting the skills learned may have lasting effects beyond the intervention period.
How you respond to waking up may matter as much as the hot flash itself
This is where the therapy steps in. By teaching women to change how they respond to night-time awakenings and hot flashes, it breaks the cycle of stress and hypervigilance. Research suggests that women who feel more in control of their reactions to hot flashes tend to report fewer and less bothersome menopause symptoms overall.
https://www.mindbodygreen.com/articles/beyond-hot-flashes-real-reason-menopausal-women-cant-sleep

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